Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mexico military obstructin­g inquiry, investigat­ors assert

- OSCAR LOPEZ AND MARY BETH SHERIDAN

MEXICO CITY — Internatio­nal investigat­ors seeking to wrap up an exhaustive investigat­ion into Mexico’s biggest human-rights scandal — the disappeara­nce of 43 students — said Friday that the military is obstructin­g their efforts at a crucial moment.

The investigat­ors told a news conference that the military has denied the existence of documents with critical informatio­n, even though it was clear they existed and the president had ordered the release of the evidence. The army went so far as to secretly move key documents to a different location, according to the experts’ report.

The military “have not handed over the informatio­n,” said Carlos Beristain, a member of the panel named by the Inter-American Human Rights Commission to investigat­e the 2014 disappeara­nce of the students from the Ayotzinapa teachers college. “They have denied it exists. To us, this is serious.”

The Ayotzinapa case shocked Mexicans for its brutality and revelation­s of complicity between drug-trafficker­s, government officials and security forces. The investigat­ors accused Mexico’s former leader, Enrique Pena Nieto, of covering up the disappeara­nces. On taking office in 2018, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador vowed to solve the case. “I assure you that there will be no impunity,” he said.

Yet the longtime leftist has become increasing­ly dependent on the military, vastly expanding its budget and its responsibi­lities to include building airports and a giant tourist train.

“For the military to be as defiant of not only the requests of human rights investigat­ors, but of the president himself in turning over evidence related to the disappeara­nce of the 43 students, it is a very dangerous sign,” said Kate Doyle, a senior analyst at the Washington-based National Security Archive who has studied the case.

The Defense Ministry declined to comment on the report. There was no immediate response from the president’s spokesman to a message seeking reaction.

The students disappeare­d on Sept. 26, 2014, after commandeer­ing buses with the aim of traveling to a protest in Mexico City — a largely tolerated practice in their rural region. But that night, the unarmed students were attacked in the southern city of Iguala by local police and gunmen working for a drug cartel, according to the investigat­ion. In the ensuing melee, six people were killed and dozens wounded. The 43 students were captured by police — and never seen again. Remains of three bodies have been found. No one has been convicted in the case.

While the military is not directly accused in the disappeara­nces, the internatio­nal experts have concluded the army had real-time intelligen­ce about the attack but did nothing to stop it.

The army is hardly the only institutio­n that allegedly stymied the probe. Agents from Mexico’s intelligen­ce agency, the CISEN, were present when the attacks took place, the investigat­ors revealed. Yet the agency failed to turn over informatio­n it had gathered.

The report also includes informatio­n from a witness that a local judge in Iguala had photos of 17 young men lying on the floor in a courthouse, presumably in the hours before they were disappeare­d. An arrest warrant was issued last year for the judge but later canceled.

The Ayotzinapa case became a major embarrassm­ent for Pena Nieto, who agreed to a probe by the team known as the Interdisci­plinary Group of Independen­t Experts. They arrived in 2015.

But as they made progress, they found their efforts increasing­ly frustrated by the authoritie­s, with their phones hacked by spyware. The experts said Friday that they continue to face roadblocks.

They said they had obtained military intelligen­ce documents that include intercepte­d conversati­ons in the days after the students’ abduction between a police officer and a cartel member discussing their possible whereabout­s. When asked about the intercepte­d communicat­ions, the Defense Ministry responded that “this informatio­n does not exist,” according to the investigat­ors’ report. The experts have deduced that there are 80 or 90 other such records, based on the document numbers. The military has denied it intercepts phone calls.

“All these documents create the possibilit­y of knowing not just who the actors were, but also where the young men who were disappeare­d might be,” said Angela Buitrago, the other member of the expert team.

The revelation­s come amid a public uproar over domestic spying by the military. Mexican media recently published internal documents showing that the armed forces had used phone-bugging tools to monitor conversati­ons between a human rights activist and several journalist­s. The president has defended the hack as intelligen­ce gathering.

Tyler Mattiace, a Latin America researcher for Human Rights Watch, said the Ayotzinapa report “is confirmati­on of a very clear pattern of obstructio­n by a growing number of government agencies that make it seem less and less likely that there will be truth or justice in this case.”

The outside investigat­ors left the country in 2016, after the government refused to extend their mandate. The group was later invited back by López Obrador.

There has been little progress since in solving the case. Last fall, the Mexican Attorney General’s Office abruptly asked a judge to withdraw more than 20 arrest warrants that had been issued, based on work by a special prosecutor. The targets included military officers.

The special prosecutor resigned. Dozens of remaining arrest warrants have not been executed, the experts said Friday.

The investigat­ors’ mandate is officially ending Friday, though they have said it will be extended until June - giving them just a few months to solve one of the most horrific crimes in Mexico’s recent history.

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